Immigrants Across the Country Are Going on Strike Today

NEW YORK, NY - JANUARY 29: People attend an afternoon rally in Battery Park to protest U.S. President Donald Trump's new immigration policies on January 29, 2017 in New York City. Trump's executive order on immigration has created chaos and confusion among many Muslims as it temporarily bars citizens from seven largely Muslim countries, as well as all refugees, from entering the U.S. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Businesses across the United States are preparing to close as immigrants plan to partake in the “Day Without Immigrants” protests.

Immigrants—namely in Washington, Austin, and Philadelphia, among others—are planning to stay home Thursday, boycotting their jobs, businesses, and even refusing to send their children to school, the Washington Postreports. The strike is in response to President Trump’s promise to crack down on those living in the country illegally, primarily through “extreme vetting.”

The immigrants will also be protesting Trump’s mission to build a wall along the Mexican border.The protest, which gained traction on social media, seeks to show the nation the impact immigrants have in the country on a daily basis.

Sweet Green, a salad chain mainly in the Northeastern part of the country, will close 18 locations in the DC-Maryland-Virginia area. Many restaurants in the New York, Philadelphia, St. Paul, Minn., and Austin areas have also announced closings, according to USA Today.

“Our diversity is what makes this family great, and we respect our team members’ right to exercise their voice in our democracy,” Sweet Green said in a statement, according to USA Today.Schools from New Mexico to D.C. have also prepared for many students to stay home.

“We respectfully ask all parents to acknowledge that students need to be in class every day to benefit from the education they are guaranteed and to avoid falling behind in school and life,” Albuquerque Public Schools principals wrote in a letter to parents, USA Today reports. It’s currently unclear how many immigrants will join in the protest.